“Really the Blues,”by Mezz Mezzrow and Bernard Wolfe, 1946
This is a
book by and about a Jewish hepcat born in Chicago who boarded the blues and
jazz train for a lifetime. It is written
in a 'jive' slang style, proving slang can be classic. He’s first a wannabe Negro slumming in the
working class area around
Learning
music and Jim Crow in the Pontiac Boys reformatory in the late 1910s, Milton
Mezzrow cements his fascination with African-American culture. He thought being
a Jewish Yid was like being half-black, so he was ‘the missing link’ between
whites and blacks. In stir a few more
times, he eventually leaves home in the early 1920s for the hot music life
after his sister insults the ‘aints. He
works in various spots in and around
This book’s a dandy hop, working like a cyclo’ of old-time jive-talkin'. It’s old timey but rhymey, a polyglot patois. Later, Mezzrow calls it "the new poetry of the proletariat." The text sounds like music sometimes, especially his description of playing without sheet music, only feel. This is something every popular musician can relate to. His description of intuitive playing while on mariuana (or grass or tea or gauge or hay or grefa or muggles or muta as he calls it) is excellent. Then he’s introduced to opium and becomes a hop head for 5 years later in the book.
Mezzrow hears
Mezzrow is
there to see the loose, jumping, intuitive
After some blue times, Mezzrow leaves his wife again (he seems to be a frequently absent husband) and also heads to
That is a taste. Buy the book and check out the rest.
P.S. – Bernard Wolfe, the co-author, was
a prolific author. He wrote for the
SWP’s The Militant, then worked as Trotsky’s secretary and bodyguard in
Prior blog reviews on music, use the blog search box, upper left: “Music is Power,” “If it Sounds Good, It is Good,” “In Search of the Blues,” “Cool Town,” Kids”(Patti Smith); “Zappa,” “Laurel Canyon,” “Grateful Dead,” “Mississippi Delta,” “Life”(Keith Richards); “Janis Joplin,” “We Have Fed You All a Thousand Years,” "33 Revolutions Per Minute," "Searching for Sugarman," "Marie and Rosetta,” “The Blues – A Visual History,” “How the Beatles Rocked the Kremlin,” “Echo in the Canyon,” “The Music Sell-Outs,” “Palmer’s Bar,” “Treme,” “Subculture,” “The Long Strange Trip.”
And I bought it at May Day Books music section!
Recommended by an older be-bop friend who plays his
tinkle-box high on weed
The Kulture Kommissar
January 5, 2021
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